NOVEMBER 27, 2014 by JOSEPH S. DIEDRICH
Nobody knows how to make Thanksgiving dinner. Despite its
ubiquity in homes across the country, no single individual could ever articulate
all the know-how required to produce a Turkey Day meal. It is a miracle and a
mystery.
At first, this claim sounds improbable. Don’t lots of people
know how to make Thanksgiving dinner? After all, almost every family has a
talented cook who prepares it. Maybe Grandma labors in the kitchen all day
long. She goes in with a raw bird and a sack of sweet potatoes. Eight hours
later, she emerges with a veritable feast.
To be sure, Grandma plays a role. Her recipes and cooking
techniques transform basic ingredients into cohesive dishes. She is certainly
the proximate cause of our bounty. Take a closer look, though, and there’s much
more than meets the eye.
Thanksgiving dinner is made of several components: turkey,
potatoes, stuffing, cranberries, corn, squash, pumpkin, milk, butter, and so
on. Grandma buys each of these raw ingredients from the grocery store. Think
about what it takes to run such a store. Contemplate all the unsung heroes —
all the hands that contribute to a successful market. The butcher cleans,
defeathers, and prepares the turkey. The baker bakes numerous loaves of bread
to be cubed for dressing. Shelf stockers display produce. Clerks transact
Grandma’s purchase. A bagger bags her items. Thanksgiving dinner depends on the
successful interaction of every one of them, each with unique skills.
Of course, none of the ingredients starts at the grocery
store. Each one comes from a different farm: potatoes from Idaho, cranberries
from Wisconsin, corn from Nebraska, and milk from California. In addition,
Grandma uses 12 — 12! — spices to flavor her dishes, none of which originated
in the United States. Grandma is talented. But do you really think she knows
how to extract nutmeg from the Myristica fragrans tree in the Banda Islands?
The squash is grown on a large farm in southern Georgia.
Farming is an incredibly complicated process; not even the farmer could
articulate how to farm. He uses an irrigation system designed in California and
built in Mexico. His tractor, assembled in China, contains an engine from
Milwaukee. Do you have any clue how rubber tires are vulcanized and shaped?
Neither does the farmer.
Back at Grandma’s house, she uses a refrigerator, an oven,
and countless other tools. A well-educated engineer designed every appliance.
The engineer drew blueprints and submitted them to a manufacturer. The
manufacturer employed thousands of laborers, each with a specialized job on the
assembly line. The oven was assembled with a precise mixture of steel, metal,
and plastic. Before the assemblymen ever laid their hands on the machine,
miners unearthed ore and oil. Innumerable refiners, smelters, welders, molders,
salesmen, accountants, managers, and assistants of all kinds aided in the
production of Grandma’s oven.
Consider all those who played a role in transportation. Ship
captains, pilots, overnight truckers: Thanksgiving dinner couldn’t happen
without them. Given the nature of their employment, they all drink gallons of
coffee every day. Don’t forget about the coffee bean roasters. They
contributed, too.
Do you still doubt my original assertion? Grandma knows her
role in final preparation, and she knows it well. The same goes for the
individual grocers, farmers, miners, manufacturers, and everyone else who helps
make it all happen. Millions upon millions of people work together — often
unwittingly — to bring Thanksgiving dinner to the table. It’s a vast web of
interrelated choices and actions. In the end, no single person knows — or could
know — how to make dinner.
Thankfully, that lack of knowledge stops no one. They act
without the foggiest of idea of the final destination or the ultimate purpose
of the fruits of their labor. More importantly, each member of the chain is
necessary; not a single step could be dispensed with, or else Thanksgiving
dinner would never exist. While no one knows how to make it, every contributor
adds an essential, specialized piece. What’s more, each individual contributes
without necessarily knowing of, caring about, or wanting the final product.
Many readers may have noticed the obvious homage to “I,
Pencil,” a famous essay by FEE’s founder Leonard Read. What he wrote about the
pencil can apply to anything we enjoy through trade, including Thanksgiving
dinner:
There is a fact still more astounding: the absence of a
master mind, of anyone dictating or forcibly directing these countless actions
which bring me into being. No trace of such a person can be found. Instead, we
find the Invisible Hand at work.
Thanksgiving dinner results from the “millions of tiny
know-hows configurating naturally and spontaneously in response to human
necessity and desire and in the absence of any human master-minding.” No one
knows how to make it. No one conceives of it or forces it into being. Yet it
still happens.
On Thanksgiving, be thankful for the benevolence of
voluntary commercial exchange. No other force in the universe is equally
responsible for our prosperity. Nothing else is more fundamentally human — or
more delicious.
http://fee.org/the_freeman/detail/i-thanksgiving-dinner
Gobble, gobble.
ReplyDeleteDouble plus good post TS
ReplyDeleteI should blush…. But of course Max the message here was that people have been doing this for millennia and they have been doing it without the need for and indeed many times in spite of government.
DeleteThe message was VERY subtle TS, but I was still able to somehow pick up on that. This year, Grandma probably ate alone so that Walmart, Target and all the other stores could give an "invisible finger" to the employees who wanted to be at home with their families but instead were at work so that others could get some bullshit "amazing" deal.
DeleteMax, some years ago society operated from 9am to 9pm and all stores were closed on Sunday and holidays. During that time we had a convenience store called Totem. People were not happy with the operating hours of totem because people going to work and coming home needed to get gas and basic foods. Totem was reformed into 7-11. The name reflected its extended operating hours… but it was still closed on Sunday and holidays. In the ilk of Madeline Murray O'hare who challenged the laws requiring her child to utter the words ‘Under God’ in the pledge of allegiance at school, others challenged why they could not shop on Sunday or indeed Christmas. Rightfully these ‘Sunday closing’ laws were considered unconstitutional. Many business however remained that way…. A currently known business that follows the tenet of ‘a day of rest’ and the ability for families to spend time together at holidays is Hobby Lobby. They ran/run THEIR business in a way that many people feel is proper and in a way that supported and respected families… but of course some people think that they are repressive religious fanatics.
DeleteThis evolution in business continued with people who wanted to buy groceries in the middle of the night…. After all, no one should be deprived of buying the necessities of life at 3 in the morning… 24/7 shopping was born.
Now I am not saying that business doesn’t like it, because an idle building, not earning revenue, is a liability and I am sure when individuals pushed for extended hours, that they were more than supportive but the bottom line here is a push to liberalize society and unhinge social mores that forced people to work at times when others don’t…. Black Friday has only been a real feature since the mid 2000’s… We reap what we sow…
P.S. You are more than willing to blame business that hires illegals and drug users who feed the drug cartels as being the real root cause for those two problems…. Where does the consumer fit into this line of thought?
The "real" beginning of 24 hour shopping didn't come from people wanting to shop at night. It was started by the industry as many had over night crews in the buildings stocking and the addition of a single cashier allowed the store to be in business during these hours. I worked in some that did well to pay the extra cashier as overnight sales are really not that great and the danger to employees was multiplied greatly by having the doors unlocked while these people were busy doing what they do. Anytime hours are extended the word Convenience comes out or the term service to the community. The community could give 3 shits if you are open or not. It's just more spin from the top to justify the silent middle finger to employees. What was it that anyone, anyone, had to go out for on Thanksgiving day as far as a Christmas present goes? Nothing is the answer, nothing that couldn't have waited until Friday morning. But the race now is among the retailers as to who can get the doors open first. We have precious few times for family and friends left in this world. We need to protect those we do have or greed will soon engulf those also. But as TS says it's partly the consumers fault also. If we open they will come and we as consumers have yet to let them down.
DeleteWell, Rick, to some extent you are correct but I worked nights and swings and holidays for a long period of my civilian carrier.... because family's wouldn't have been happy if they couldn't call their relatives on Christmas Day... outages were never acceptable and for the most part, being 'on call' wasn't fast enough. Believe me, I talked to a lot of irrate customers who expected service 24/7.
DeleteOn the way home... at midnight or 7 in the morning I many times stopped to shop so that my sleep during the day would not be interupted...
I shopped on Thanksgiving..............Had to pick up a six pack on the way to my mother in laws for dinner with my family.
ReplyDelete